Sentences with phrase «left page turn buttons»

When your device starts to power on, quickly let go of the power button then immediately press and hold the power button and both the bottom right and the bottom left page turn buttons together.
If you turn on volume control in Kindle and turn on volume control in the icurus settings then the right and left page turn buttons work in the Kindle app and in many others.

Not exact matches

To view that, select the «Date Range» box on the left side of the page, turn the «Compare» button on, and select the dates you want to compare.
A book that reads itself to your toddler as she turns pages or pushes buttons leaves little room for a parent to interact.
The page - turning buttons are located on both the right and left sides of Kindle, which allows both left and right - handed customers to hold, turn pages, and position Kindle with one hand.
The page - turn buttons on the left and right sides are quieter clickers than the previous generation's.
This e-reader also has a dedicated home button and physical page turn keys.Advanced settings lets you remap the page turn buttons for those of you that are left handed or want to read digital manga.
It has page turn buttons on the left and right side of the screen that can be adjusted so that the upper buttons turn the page forward and the lower ones turn the page back, or vice versa.
This means, you can hold the Oasis with your left or right hand, and still use the buttons comfortably to turn pages.
The left and right bezels contain rubber - covered page - turning buttons if you choose to use them instead, but they're poorly implemented (although very quiet).
You can turn the pages by gestures or with the click of a button on the left / right hand side.
The Boyue not only has a touchscreen but also page turn buttons on the left and right side of the screen.
They decided to go with a simple home button and physical page turn keys on the left and right hand side.
The only buttons present on the Illumina are physical page turn keys on the left / right hand side of the screen, back button and the physical button that turns on the front - lit display.
There are manual page turn buttons on the left and right hand side.
This new e-reader does have a touchscreen, but also physical page turn buttons on the left and right side.
There are physical page turn buttons on the left and right hand side of the e-reader.
The page turn buttons provide a great amount of synergy with the gyroscope because it makes the Oasis compatible with people who are left handed.
Although that arrangement isn't so bad for navigation, it is an awkward position for page turns, unless you're grasping the e-reader by the lower third (only then is it clear that the 2 - inch long centred button is situated so that it's in reach of either your left or right thumb).
My concerns with the touch screen interface: 1 — Fingerprints / smudges on the screen 2 — It doesn't appear to have a next page button, requiring me to block the screen to turn the page, and leaving a smudge behind 3 — The Sony Touch screen interface made the screen less readable, is it the same with the Kindle?
The button layout forces you to hold the Pocket Edition in a certain way (in your left hand, if you want to comfortably use the buttons to turn pages), and I did slightly miss having page - turn buttons on both sides, but I mostly used the touch screen to navigate anyway.
On the left edge are the page - turn controls (forward and back) and a button with a search icon on it.
It's a touchscreen device, with page turns performed by pressing the left or right sectors of the page - a middle press launches other options - so buttons are limited to an on / off switch and that light switch.
On the left hand side of the unit it has a magnifying glass and page turn buttons.
At the welcome screen hold down the button on the top right (page turn button) and at the same time slide your finger across the top of the screen from left to right.
The physical page turn buttons really give it the edge because they are slim and optimized for right or left handed people.
This unit has the page turn forward on the right hand side and the back button on the left hand side.
If you are left handed there are page turn buttons on that side to seamlessly assist you.
The one thing this e-reader has going for it is that it has physical page turn buttons on the left and right sides.
This device also has mechanical buttons so you can either turn pages directly on the screen or use the right and left buttons of the reader, perfectly located to facilitate the one - hand reading!
I am pleased to report that the PRO HD has page turn buttons on the left and right hand side, which is appealing to righties and lefties.
Amazon has built in sensors to detect whether you are holding the device with your left hand or right hand, and will automatically rotate the page and turn buttons to match.
Although that arrangement isn't so bad for navigation, it is an awkward position for page turns, unless you're grasping the e-reader by the lower third (only then is it clear that the approximately two - inch - long, centered button is situated so that it's in reach of either your left or right thumb).
When I leave the house, I would like to have a 6 ″ e-ink screen with physical page turn buttons.
If one swipes the screen the desired page turn direction (left forward, right back) and holds, the pages will turn automatically as if one were holding the page turn button.
For starters, the Story HD has no page - turning buttons alongside the display; instead, those chores are left to the four - way navigation bar beneath the screen.
Its brilliant design features page - turning buttons along one side of the device that line up close to the thumb for right - handers when held one way, and close to the thumb for left - handers when turned upside down.
The super-thin page turn buttons sit discretely along both sides, but that leaves very little space for a fat thumb like ours to push the buttons without getting in the way of the words on the page.
On the design / reading experience front, I am not happy that all of the page turn buttons are on the left side.
Like the Kindle Wi - Fi, it features a QWERTY keyboard but has an up / down button (rather than a left / right button) for page - turning.
Plus, Amazon has catered for lefties with a built - in accelerometer which detects whether you're reading with your left or right hand, and automatically rotates the page and page turn buttons to match.
And I'm not a fan of the controls: the main culprit is the page turn buttons, which are located on the left side of the row of 5 metal buttons below the bottom of the screen, and are therefore not in a comfortable position for one - handed reading (even if holding it with your left hand, you'd have to hold the device by the very bottom corner).
You read a paper book by turning pages to the left and right; these buttons are positioned one atop the other.
This touch screen leaves something to be desired, and the addition of page turn buttons would have been welcome here.
There are still two separate buttons for turning pages, but that's an effort to accommodate left - and right - handed people.
There are very narrow bezels on three sides of the 7 - inch, 300ppi E Ink screen; one side (right or left, depending on how you're holding it) has a larger bezel with physical page turn buttons.
There are basically two ways that you hold the device in your hand, and depending on how you're holding it, your left thumb will either be resting on the left bottom corner of the device or higher up on its side, where a second set of page - turning buttons sit.
But iRex takes austerity in design to an extreme, with just one long flip bar (used mostly for turning pages) and a menu button on the left edge of the display.
It's a large round button which you press on the right or left edge to turn the pages forward or back.
The Paperwhite is also missing the Voyage's page turn buttons on the left and right bezels.
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